Have you tried:
Resetting PRAM
Resetting PMU
Reseating RAM and processor
Switching one stick of RAM and the other, to test each one
Diagnostics on the system on the HD (Disk Utility, Disk Warrior, Archive & 
Install, etc.)
Let us know how all that works, and if any of those things help the problem. 
From what you've said so far, it's not quite enough info to diagnose it for 
you. Kernel panics are USUALLY hardware failure, and occasionally VERY 
corrupted system files. Of hardware, the most likely culprit of Kernel panics 
is bad RAM. However, I have seen Airport cards do it, and I'm sure there are 
other components that can cause kernel panics as well. External devices can 
cause kernel panics as well; Try running it with nothing plugged in except 
power, and see if the problem persists. This will rule out peripherals. 


        -Elliott




On Oct 28, 2010, at 12:00 PM, Ashgrove wrote:

> ANYBODY????
> 

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